Now is the time to buy in new zealand
In an interview with The New Zealand Herald, Ashley Church, a veteran property investor with 30 years' experience and Chief Executive of New Zealand's Property Traders Association, offered 10 reasons why investors should buy property in New Zealand now...
1: Buyers have a choice of stock and not much competition
at present.
2: Building consent numbers have fallen by 22 per cent and
are still falling. Tony Alexander, Chief Economist of the Bank of New Zealand says they are at their
lowest level since the early-1990s and a homes shortage will start to show
later next year.
3: New homes will be more expensive to build as the falling
dollar increases the cost of importing construction material and a number of
builders have left or are leaving the industry.
4: Investors have been quitting rental properties, which will
lead to a shortage and rents rising. "Investors have largely disappeared
from the market. Fundamentals driving the need for rentals have slowed but not
stopped - rental demand is still strong; it's a recipe for a future boom,"
Church says.
5: Falling interest rates and tax cuts have increased the
affordability of home ownership. Real Estate Institute President Mike Elford
says home affordability is the best it has been for a long time. Buyers with
good credit history and payment capacity are still able to secure low-deposit
finance.
6: The real estate market has not imploded in the current
financial crisis - prices have held steady in the face of negative media.
Elford says despite slowing sales, median prices are holding.
The national median house price for last month was £124,300 compared with
£123,300 in October and £129,600 for the corresponding period last year.
This shows a decrease in national median house values of 4.11 per cent compared
with this point last year. Alexander says house prices will decrease only 5-10 per
cent by the end of the year.
They will stay flat over next year but rise in 2010. "It is quite amazing
the number of people who seem to believe we should be predicting massive price
declines in the face of fundamentals which suggest otherwise," says
Alexander, who receives "hate mail" for refuting suggestions that
house prices will fall by between another 30-40 per cent.
Church says the present property slump is nothing like that in the mid-70s when
values fell 38 per cent. We won't see that this time, he says, because the drop
in interest rates will allow people to hold on to their homes.
7: At the same time, vendors are now very negotiable on price
compared with this time a year ago. They are increasingly aware they may need
to leave some money in their property in the form of vendor finance if they
want to sell, and that investor buyers look for positive cash-flow properties.
8: Positively-geared property deals can again be found all
over.
9: Prices will recover and property values will increase
again. The downturn in property is due to a lack of confidence rather than any
Change in the property market fundamentals, Church says.
10: There is nowhere better for most Kiwis to invest their
money given that property has doubled in value, on average, every seven years
for more than 50 years - and there is nothing to suggest that will Change.
Source: www.homesoverseas.co.uk/news